Exploring Magical History: Egypt – II Early Dynastic and Old Kingdom By Josephine McCarthy As we now begin to look at various ancient cultures, it is wise to remember that what we today call magic, in its more advanced and mystical aspects, was an inherent ingredient of many ancient religions. It was the power and skill to protect and guard what was sacred and precious, it was used to keep the powers of nature in balance as much as possible, and it was also used in a mystical sense to keep the worlds of the gods and the humans close together. This weaving of magic and religion, which in the ancient world were one and the same thing, was evident in both Ancient Egypt and Ancient Sumer/Mesopotamia. These two very ancient civilisations both independently developed magical religions that still have a strong bearing on our magic today. Because of that, it is important if we are going to understand the development of magic, that we look closely and try to spot in those distant past cultures, the roots of today’s magical behaviour. Old Kingdom Egypt was a highly developed cultural and religious society, where religion, and the magic within the religion kept all the plates spinning, and the chief plate spinner was the king. On one hand, the health and prosperity of the land and people were his main focus, and on the other hand, the passage through death and the subsequent soul transformation was of the utmost importance, and this was achieved by tending the gods properly, and by living to the laws of Ma’at. The aspects we will look at in this essay are not all the magical religious or political aspects of the Early Dynastic and Old Kingdom, of which there were many, rather I have chosen key concepts, and dynamics that have their roots in the distant past and are still alive in various ways in magic today. By understanding these key concepts in their early forms, it will help you to understand the other aspects of Old Kingdom religion and magic should you wish to study them further. You will find some of the things we look at as obvious roots to present magical behaviour, and some things we will look at will not be so obvious, but with careful thought, you will start to understand their significance. And a warning – when we are looking at these incredible ancient cultures, be very wary about romanticising them. From a distance they can look astonishing, powerful, knowledgeable and mythical. But when you look closer, you will see that even though these cultures achieved great things, they all had their dark sides, their stupid sides, and eventually the weakness and fragility of the human personality becomes the Achilles heel that can bring a nation to its knees. Human nature never really changes, and we can learn a lot about ourselves and the societies we live in by looking at the greatness and also the destructiveness that were the two pillars of these great nations. Background to the start of the Early Dynastic and Old Kingdom Periods From around 3,500BCE three main territories emerged that would set the stage for the later unification of lower and upper Egypt – Abydos, Naqada, and Nekhen (Hierakonpolis), each ruled by a hereditary nobility. Abydos became the centre for funerary cults, and the first dynasty kings were buried there. Examples of the first written records were found in the Abydos tomb U-j1, labels inscribed with the figure of a scorpion (not connected to the Scorpion king of the Nekhen Macehead). 1 Dryer, G. 1992. Recent discoveries at Abydos Cemetery U. Thinis in Upper Egypt appears to have been an early administrate and power centre, but by the first dynasty, under king Narmer (Menes), Memphis began to emerge as a capital for unified Egypt. The king of the unified country was seen as being the force of unity, the protector of Egypt from the forces of chaos. This was a time when a strong Egyptian identity and a sense of nationalism emerged. During this very early period in the history of Dynastic Egypt, we find some interesting crumbs of evidence, that point to apparent early magical thinking, and may have been early forms of what later developed as magical concepts. Nekhen Tomb 100 The Nekhen tomb number 100 is the earliest known painted tomb in Egypt (about 3500 BC - Naqada II). Nekhen (Hawk City or the Red Mound) was a political and religious centre in Upper Egypt, thought to be one of the three main centres to have emerged at this time. Nekhen was the centre of the cult of Horus of Nekhen and remained a cultic centre for Horus long after its political and general religious power waned. It was where archaeologists found the Narmer Palette and the Scorpion Macehead. Bear in mind that Horus was often a representation of the king. The tomb painting itself is a riot of activity that seemed to centre upon a procession of boats. Among the imagery we find such interesting fragments such as a man or woman holding two lions under control, a motif that was also found in Mesopotamian and Indus Valley cultures, a man smiting with a mace, which would later become a motif of kingship, and the boats themselves, some showing what appear to be priests (male or female) protecting a boat, and some appear to have what looks like shrines upon them. The motif of the boat and shrine was something that would become central to the religious and funerary cults throughout the ages of dynastic Egypt. Here is a section of the tomb painting (Cairo Egyptian Museum). Boats Boats became a major focus in the burial customs and funerary rituals, texts and mythos in Dynastic Egypt, carrying on ritual behaviour that was evident much earlier in Egypt. It is likely that the appearance of boats in the funerary mythos is partly to do with the Nile (Egyptians knew boats carried you places), but these boats were not intended to sail across or up/down the Nile, but upon the ‘other Nile’: The Milky Way. During the spring and autumn equinox, the Milky Way and the rising and setting of the sun lined up together – Ra, the sun, rode across the Milky Way2. In the Egyptian pantheon, the Milky Way was connected to 2 Searching for ancient Egypt: art, architecture, and artifacts from the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania. Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, David P. Silverman, Edward Brovarski, p. 41, Cornell University Press, 1997 Hathor, the cow goddess, so we start to see the interweaving of the very old motifs that emerged in the prehistoric ideas of the people in the region, i.e. cattle cults. With the boats painted on the walls of the Nekhen tomb 100, and also predynastic rock art in the desert to the east of what is now Luxor, we see that the boat was a major aspect of not only practical thinking, but also mythical thinking, and that underlies a lot of Egyptian thinking in religion and magic: the practical mundane and the religious magical thinking were fused together. The Egyptians were very pragmatic in their approach to the mysteries, and as the religion developed, so layer upon layer of meaning was woven together in quite astonishing ways. Here are two images from the Eastern Egyptian predynastic desert rock art. A large area of the eastern desert, and not close to water, is littered with rock art depicting boats. The first image displays a developed mythos with Horus the falcon at the prow and a bull prominently positioned. The second image is a drawing of a rock art boat that is being dragged – a motif that would repeat many times in funerary images and is also likely the meaning behind the gripped hands of kings when they were depicted in statues: they are holding the prow ropes of the god in his barque (as the Developing Ones as depicted in the Book of Gates).3 4 3 http://www.eastern-desert.com 4 Lankester, F.D. 2013, Desert Boats-Predynastic and Pharaonic Era Rock-art in Egypt’s Central Eastern Desert: Distribution, Dating and Interpretation, BAR 2544, Archeopress, Oxford We also find boat burials at the tombs and pyramids of kings from the 1st dynasty right through to the 12th dynasty middle kingdom5. These are the ‘solar barques’ that carry the king on his journey to the heavens, and they were often buried in their own graves, for example the early First Dynasty fourteen Hor-Aha boats at Abydos. They averaged 75ft long and were buried in their own graves in the Abydos necropolis.6 Nineteen boat burials in elite tombs were found at Helwan, a necropolis site close to Memphis, and are thought to be early dynastic7. A stunning boat burial was found at the foot of the great pyramid of Khufu, with the boat sealed into a pit. It shows signs of having been in water, and it has been assumed that the boat was a royal ceremonial barge that brought the dead king to the tomb. However, it is worth noting that an ancient way of sealing a boat and making it water worthy, is upon completion, to place it in water until the wood swells and seals the joints. So the water evidence may have simply been a part of the production process. The use of boats as a travelling vessel in death appears in death mythos around the world, for obvious practical reasons.
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